Fathers of Confederation

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL FACTORS LEADING TO CONFEDERATION
Advertisements

Click to edit Master subtitle style 2/4/10 Charlottetown Conference 1864 Quebec Conference 1864 London Conference 1867.
Confederation Timeline
1. Economic 2. Transportation 3. Defence 4. Political.
How Canada became an Independent Country
Path To Confederation.
Pathway to Confederation Charlottetown Conference.
Confederation!!..for Most. The Lead up to Confederation, who wanted it, who hated it, and finally the BNA Act.
The Charlottetown Conference Steps Towards Confederation.
What was it ? The great coalition was established in 1864 after the fall of the government. The coalition was formed by three important groups, the clear.
CONFEDERATION. WHY CONFEDERATE? -Unstable Government -Divided by English and French loyalties, the government could never agree on new laws, government.
SOCIAL STUDIES 10 BUILDING A NATION POLITICAL PARTIES AND DEADLOCK.
Pre-Confederation Politics in Canada
Confederation Won! With the first dawn of this summer morning, we hail the birthday of a new nation. A united British and America takes its place among.
The Formation of the Canadian Federation. The two party system Conservatives: John A. Macdonald (Canada West) and George-Étienne Cartier (Canada East)
The Deal is Made.... The Quebec Conference October, 1864 – approximately a month after the Charlottetown Conference Many of the issues that were introduced.
Unit 3: Building A Nation
REPRESENTATION BY POPULATION Rep-by-pop: Who was in favour of this? Clear Grits # of representatives in the Legislative Assembly depends on the # of people.
Creating a New Country. Government: the way people organize themselves and make decisions Canada is a democracy: the people hold the power and elect their.
Fathers of Confederation
Internal Political Problems Page 92. Internal political problems What political problems arose in United Canada in the late 1850s What possible solution.
Factors  Two major factors laid behind the problems of finding a stable government in the Canadas  First problem was the equal number of seats in the.
C ONFEDERATION A United Canada. U NITED C ANADA In the 1860s, the British colonies in North American faced many problems Confederation was a solution.
The Road to Confederation
The Drive to Nationhood: Group # Group #
Chapter 7 topic 4 Confederation Discussions Pages
CONFEDERATION. THE FIGHT FOR RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT After years of unrest and rebellions, Britain suspended civil rights, dissolved the assemblies of.
The push towards confederation. Not working, needed to change the way Canada was being governed.
The Drive To Nationhood
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL FACTORS LEADING TO CONFEDERATION Confederation.
CONFEDERATION Mr. Sharp Socials 10. The Conferences Mind Map the first two conferences leading to Confederation – The Charlottetown Conference and the.
Chapter 2 Review December 2015 Politics Famous People Confederation America Science and Technology Victorian Life.
Formation of a Canadian Federation: Confederation
A Brief Overview of Canadian Confederation
Setting the Stage for Confederation
Chapter 2 Review December 2015.
Unit 1: Exploring Canadian Identity
The Challenge of Confederation
The Birth (and Brief Death) of the CPR
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
Causes of Confederation
Confederation Ms. Dow Socials 10.
Seeking Political Solutions
Chapter 8 Confederation
Confederation Achieved
Confederation.
Confederation Achieved
Confederation.
Confederation Results
Politics In Pre-Confederation Canada
Canada and Quebec Before Confederation:
British North America Act
The Challenges of Confederation
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
We got 99 problems, but Confederation ain’t one (yet)
The Road to Confederation
Canadian Identity Chapter 1.
Path to Confederation Notes
Towards Confederation
Political Factors that Supported the push for Confederation
Canadian Confederation Overview July 1, 1867
Confederation Ms. Dow Socials 9.
Canada West vs Canada East
Sir John A. MacDonald George Brown
Political Deadlock in the Canadas
The Road to Confederation
Railway, Pacific Scandal, Macdonald and Mackenzie
The Road to Confederation Upper and Lower Canada: The Roots of Discontent In the wake of the Constitution Act of 1791, people in Upper and Lower Canada.
Sir John A Macdonald BY:Trisshan.
JEOPARDY Victorians Other Lands
Presentation transcript:

Fathers of Confederation

Who were the Fathers of Confederation? The Fathers of Confederation are the 36 men who created Canada They represented the 6 different colonies Some agreed with the idea, some did not, so each colony would have to decide for itself whether or not it would join

Three major players While there were 36 men who created Canada, we will only discuss 3 of the most important ones: John A. Macdonald (Canada West) Georges Etienne Cartier (Canada East) George Brown (Canada West)

Sir John A. Macdonald The idea for confederation was mainly his He wrote 50 of the 72 Resolutions by himself He was very well respected by the business people and by the other politicians He had great skill as a diplomat He had great skill as a speaker

Sir George Etienne Cartier Was a very powerful representative for the French people in Canada Was very good friends with Sir John A. Macdonald, so they worked very well together They shared many of the same ideas about what Canada should look like He had a large group of friends, many who helped him convince the people of Canada East that confederation would be good for the French

George Brown Loved the idea of confederation, but hated Macdonald Supported “Rep by Pop” which is “Representation by Population”. This means that there is one person who represents a certain number of people. Believed that the Church and the State should be separate – that no church should tell the government what laws to make or how to govern the country

First Prime Minister For their work on confederation, the queen knighted both Macdonald and Cartier When the politicians returned from London to Canada, they needed to hold an election Sir John A. Macdonald won the election, so he and his party (the Conservatives) formed Canada’s first government